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#233340 - 13/09/2004 18:24 Universal alchemy or pack o' lies?
DLF
addict

Registered: 24/07/2003
Posts: 500
Loc: Colorado, N.A.
Anybody closer to the genius at Manchester U. care to comment on this?
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-- DLF

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#233341 - 13/09/2004 18:56 Re: Universal alchemy or pack o' lies? [Re: DLF]
matthew_k
pooh-bah

Registered: 12/02/2002
Posts: 2298
Loc: Berkeley, California
They're going to need a lot more proof before I'll accept it. Translating from one instruction set to another is not a simple thing. Translating system calls to equivalent system calls isn't trivial, but has been done. Translating between graphic routines is something I know nothing about, but something tells me it's not an easily solved problem. (3D cordinates represented differently? All it'll take is a matrix multiply to transform them... that's only 9 multiplies and 6 additions per cordinate)

VMWare does true hardware virtualization(translating system calls), and they do it well and fast. The only reason they can do it at any speed is because they run the native code and only intercept system calls.

If this were an easily solved problem someone would have done it. Maybe they've done everything they claim, but the likelyhood that it's efficient to the point of being able to run todays x86 apps on todays PPC processors is unlikely.

Matthew

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#233342 - 13/09/2004 18:57 Re: Universal alchemy or pack o' lies? [Re: DLF]
tfabris
carpal tunnel

Registered: 20/12/1999
Posts: 31600
Loc: Seattle, WA
Velly velly intelestink.

As I started reading, I was skeptical, but then I read the paragraph about how they do intermediate interpreter language blocks. Of course, that makes so much more sense.

If this is true, it's going to turn the emulation world on its head. Stuff like MAME and DosBox are going to have to start over from scratch, but the speed gain from the paradigm shift will make it inevitable.
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Tony Fabris

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#233343 - 13/09/2004 19:24 Re: Universal alchemy or pack o' lies? [Re: tfabris]
DWallach
carpal tunnel

Registered: 30/04/2000
Posts: 3810
I don't know any more than the Wired article, but the clear way to do it is with something analogous to VMware or VirtualPC. Emulating a low-level piece of hardware is much easier than trying to build a bridge for system calls, services, and everything else to work at the application level.

Once you look at it as a VM emulation issue, then the only issue is performance. The claim is that they take blocks of code and translate them whole, presumably caching the result. In some respect, that's exactly what Transmeta does, and it's also comparable to how Apple ran 68K software on PowerPC. When they talk about emulating Xbox 1 on Xbox 2 hardware, they're glossing over just how much faster an Xbox 2 is. There's a lot of room for slop.

There may well be some seriously cool stuff under the hood to make this all go extra super fast. But, on the surface at least, you can achieve your design goals without requiring anything exotic.

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#233344 - 14/09/2004 20:23 Re: Universal alchemy or pack o' lies? [Re: DWallach]
music
addict

Registered: 25/06/2002
Posts: 456
You mentioned Transmeta's code-morphing and Apple's 68K emulator for PowerPCs.

Another quite interesting emulator was FX!32 for Alpha from DEC.

In fact, for a year or two (around 1996), the fastest x86 (or "Pentium") you could buy was actually a DEC Alpha! (running FX!32....)

Whip your mind back 8 years to an article in BYTE.

Or this article from Real World has a comparison chart on the second page.

Edited to put in links

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